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Metrics - Education

Key Metrics to Track (Education Report Card)

CategoryMetric
Academic Performance Reading & math proficiency rates
Equity Funding per student by district
Teachers Retention, satisfaction, pay
Cost Cost per graduate, student debt levels
Workforce Job placement rates
Safety Incident rates
Engagement Attendance, graduation rates

What You Can Do


Act Now

The best anchors for this page are official sources already used nationally: NAEP for academic performance, NCES for enrollment, graduation, and staffing indicators, the U.S. Department of Education for chronic absenteeism and College Scorecard measures, the U.S. Department of Labor for apprenticeship data, and OECD for international comparison.

NAEP provides national, state, and district results; chronic absenteeism is commonly defined federally as missing 10% or more of school days; College Scorecard publishes data on completion, debt, repayment, and earnings; and the Department of Labor publishes Registered Apprenticeship data and statistics.

A strong education system should be measured by whether it:

What gets measured gets improved:

1. Governance and Accountability Metrics

Requirement Family: EDU-GOV

Core Measures

Best Public-Facing Metrics

Why it matters

A system is not accountable unless the public can see performance clearly, compare it honestly, and track whether failure leads to action.

2. Equity and Funding Metrics

Requirement Family: EDU-FND

Core Measures

Best Public-Facing Metrics

Why it matters

The issue is not just how much is spent. It is whether money reaches students, teachers, and classrooms efficiently and fairly.

3. Early Childhood and School Readiness Metrics

Requirement Family: EDU-ECE

Core Measures

Best Public-Facing Metrics

Why it matters

Strong systems intervene early. NCES already tracks young-child enrollment, making early access a practical national measure.

4. Teacher Excellence Metrics

Requirement Family: EDU-TCH

Core Measures

Best Public-Facing Metrics

Why it matters

Teacher quality and stability are leading indicators of system quality. NCES tracks staffing pressure, and OECD shows U.S. teacher pay is weak relative to similarly educated workers.

5. Curriculum and Instruction Metrics

Requirement Family: EDU-CUR

Core Measures

Best Public-Facing Metrics

Why it matters

NAEP is the clearest public benchmark for whether students are mastering core academic content over time and across states.

6. Assessment and Continuous Improvement Metrics

Requirement Family: EDU-ASM

Core Measures

Best Public-Facing Metrics

Why it matters

Measurement should lead to action. Federal guidance treats chronic absenteeism as a core indicator of student risk and disengagement.

7. Career Pathways and Workforce Alignment Metrics

Requirement Family: EDU-CTE

Core Measures

Best Public-Facing Metrics

Why it matters

The U.S. Department of Labor already treats Registered Apprenticeship as a measurable national workforce pipeline, making it a practical scorecard metric.

8. Higher Education Affordability and Value Metrics

Requirement Family: EDU-HE

Core Measures

Best Public-Facing Metrics

Why it matters

College Scorecard already publishes completion, debt, repayment, and earnings data, which makes these measures practical and transparent for families and policymakers.

9. Student Support, Safety, and Well-Being Metrics

Requirement Family: EDU-SUP

Core Measures

Best Public-Facing Metrics

Why it matters Students cannot learn well when they are absent, unsafe, or unsupported. Chronic absenteeism is one of the clearest visible warning indicators.

10. Digital Infrastructure, Data, Privacy, and AI Metrics

Requirement Family: EDU-DIG

Core Measures

Best Public-Facing Metrics

Why it matters A modern education system depends on secure digital access and trustworthy data practices, especially as AI becomes part of learning, tutoring, and administration.

11. Lifelong Learning and Adult Reskilling Metrics

Requirement Family: EDU-LLL

Core Measures

Best Public-Facing Metrics

Why it matters The education system should not end at age 18 or 22. It should help workers adapt throughout life.

12. Integrity, Oversight, and Public Report Card Metrics

Requirement Family: EDU-INT

Core Measures

Best Public-Facing Metrics

Why it matters

Without oversight, funding can drift, reporting can mislead, and trust collapses.

13. Top-Line Metrics for the Public

These 12 cover the whole system: early learning, academic quality, engagement, teacher strength, workforce readiness, affordability, and value.

14. Data Source Map

Requirement FamilyPrimary Data Sources
EDU-GOVState report cards, federal reporting, audit records
EDU-FNDNCES finance data, state finance reports
EDU-ECENCES early-childhood enrollment, state kindergarten readiness systems
EDU-TCHNCES School Pulse Panel, NTPS, OECD teacher comparisons
EDU-CURNAEP, state assessments, civics and literacy benchmarks
EDU-ASMED absenteeism data, state intervention systems
EDU-CTEPerkins data, DOL Registered Apprenticeship, state workforce agencies
EDU-HECollege Scorecard, IPEDS, state higher-ed systems
EDU-SUPED absenteeism data, NCES school climate/staffing data
EDU-DIGState and district infrastructure reporting, privacy and cybersecurity logs
EDU-LLLDOL, workforce agencies, community college and adult-ed systems
EDU-INTAudits, inspector general findings, public report cards

15. Bottom Line

The Education Metrics page should answer one question:

Is the system producing better outcomes at a reasonable cost?

That means measuring:

That is the cleanest bridge between the Requirements page and the Act Now button.

Next: Technology and AI

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Immigration Metrics

A congressional performance dashboard that compares legislative activity and immigration-system outcomes against clear requirements: secure borders, lawful process, due process, humane treatment, workforce needs, family stability, measurable accountability, and data transparency.

Latest available local data will be shown when the JSON files are present.

Immigration Metrics Dashboard

Executive Summary

This dashboard measures whether Congress and the immigration system are producing practical, measurable results: lawful border management, timely processing, fair adjudication, workforce stability, family stability, data transparency, and due-process protection. It is designed to separate measurable performance from political noise so citizens can see where the system is working, where it is failing, and where Congress should legislate, fund, oversee, or require public reporting.

Congressional Work: This measure tracks bills, sponsorships, cosponsorships, votes, hearings, oversight, funding, and enacted laws. It is used to determine whether Congress is doing measurable work that aligns with the immigration requirements rather than relying on speeches or symbolic activity.

System Results: This measure tracks backlogs, processing speed, lawful entry, border management, integration, workforce needs, and transparency. It is used to determine whether public outcomes are improving and whether legislation is producing operational results.

Rights and Due Process: This measure tracks legal access, detention review, error correction, complaint handling, wrongful-detention risk, erroneous-removal risk, and civil-liberties safeguards. It is used to ensure enforcement performance is measured together with constitutional protection and human consequences.

System Score Summary

Overall ScoreGradeLast Refreshed
Scored MetricsPending MetricsPoints Earned
Data QualityInfo MetricsHistory Points

Top Dashboard Metrics

Metric Current Value Meaning
IssueImmigrationRequirement-based congressional and system-performance scoring.
Bills Reviewed--Bills classified to this issue by the report-card ETL.
Members Assessed--Senators and Representatives scored for measurable issue activity.
Average Grade--Average grade based on overall score for the selected filters.
Loading local dashboard data. If data files are not present yet, starter metrics will be shown.

Live Immigration System Metrics

This section adds operational immigration-system metrics to the congressional report card. Together, they show both legislative performance and practical outcomes.

Requirement Domains

Immigration performance should be measured against what the country actually needs. These domains can be connected to bill tags, budget items, hearings, agency performance data, and member report-card scoring.

Domain Requirement Metric Connection

Congressional Performance Summary

This summary focuses on legislative performance: whether Congress is doing useful work on immigration, whether that work is moving forward, and whether it aligns with the requirements.

Metric Value Meaning

Member Leaderboard

Members are scored by engagement, progress, outcome, and overall requirement alignment. This table reads local JSON exported from the report-card ETL.

Rank Member State Chamber Party Engagement Progress Outcome Overall Grade

Status of Immigration Legislation

This table summarizes where immigration-related bills are in the legislative process. A healthy Congress should show meaningful movement beyond bill introduction and referral.

Status Bucket Bills Interpretation

Scoring Method

Score Component What It Measures Evidence Examples
EngagementWhether a member did measurable work.Sponsorship, cosponsorship, votes, hearings, oversight, amendments, constituent-facing activity.
ProgressWhether legislation moved through the process.Committee action, markup, reports, calendar placement, chamber passage, conference action.
OutcomeWhether work produced enforceable results.Enacted law, funding, oversight requirements, implementation, public reporting, measurable agency change.
Requirement AlignmentWhether the action addresses the actual immigration requirements.Secure lawful entry, faster processing, due process, civil liberties, family stability, workforce needs, data transparency.
GradesA through F based on overall score.A = strong measurable action; B = useful progress; C = partial action; D = minimal useful action; F = no meaningful action or action contrary to requirements.

References and Data Sources

The dashboard should rely on official government data where available, supplemented by reputable public datasets when official recurring data are incomplete.

Source Use on Page Reference
Congress.gov API / Library of Congress Bill text, bill summaries, sponsors, cosponsors, actions, subjects, and legislative status. https://api.congress.gov/
U.S. House Clerk House roll-call votes and chamber activity when vote-level scoring is added. https://clerk.house.gov/Votes
U.S. Senate Senate roll-call votes and chamber activity when vote-level scoring is added. https://www.senate.gov/legislative/votes_new.htm
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services Processing times, backlog data, naturalization, work authorization, and immigration-benefit performance metrics. https://www.uscis.gov/tools/reports-and-studies
U.S. Customs and Border Protection Border encounters, lawful port-of-entry measures, inadmissibility, and operational border-management context. https://www.cbp.gov/newsroom/stats
Executive Office for Immigration Review Immigration court backlog, pending cases, case completions, adjudication activity, and due-process-related court metrics. https://www.justice.gov/eoir/statistical-year-book
DHS Office of Homeland Security Statistics Immigration yearbook data, lawful permanent residence, temporary admissions, enforcement actions, and long-term trends. https://ohss.dhs.gov/
DHS Office for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties Civil-rights complaint handling, detention conditions oversight, civil-liberties safeguards, and due-process accountability. https://www.dhs.gov/office-civil-rights-and-civil-liberties
Local Voice to Congress JSON Website-facing exports generated by the local ETL and metrics scripts. data/issues/immigration_2025_summary.json; data/leaderboards/immigration_2025_leaderboard.json; data/metrics_current.json; data/metrics_trends.json

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